“…It is a relatively robust finding in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) research, for instance, that the amygdala along with the fusiform gyrus, and temporal structures respond more to faces than objects (i.e., face selectivity, reviewed by Troiani, Price, & Schultz, 2014). The speed of this face selective system has been unraveled in electroencephalography (EEG) research where the N170, as the earliest component, has received much attention demonstrating increased negative amplitudes of faces compared to non-face objects (e.g., Blau, Maurer, Tottenham, & McCandliss, 2007;Wang, Miao, & Zhao, 2014).…”